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Geologic Overview of Lassen Volcanic National Park William Hirt Department of Biological and Physical Sciences College of the Siskiyous Weed, California 2 Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park INTRODUCTION Lassen Peak is the southernmost of the fifteen or so major volcanoes that dominate the High Cascade Range—a chain of volcanic peaks that stretches from northern California to southern British Columbia. Prior to the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980 Lassen Peak was the most recently active volcano in the High Cascades. Between 1914 and 1917 its eruptions (Fig. 1) focused public attention on the volcanic character of northeastern California and led to the designation of the area surrounding the peak as a national park. Lassen Peak is a prominent part of the 600,000-year old Lassen Volcanic Center (LVC) where ongoing thermal and seismic activity indicate the presence of a modern magmatic system. Because another eruption is possible at any time and is likely to produce fast-moving pyroclastic flows and volcanic debris flows that could devastate low-lying areas tens of kilometers from the volcano (Hoblitt et al., 1987), the LVC continues to be closely monitored by geologists. This paper presents a brief summary of the geology of Lassen Volcanic National Park that will serve as an introduction to the features we will be visiting during our upcoming field trip. The research presented here has been drawn from many sources, especially works by Clynne and Muffler (2010), Clynne et al. (2000) and Kane (1980). The complete list of the references cited in this work is given at the end of the paper. Definitions of words that are italicized in the text will be found in a glossary that follows the references. GEOLOGIC SETTING Cascade subduction Eruptive activity in Lassen Volcanic National Park (LVNP) is the result of plate interactions along the western margin of North America. Along the Cascadia subduction zone, which lies just offshore along the Pacific Northwest coast, the North American lithosphere is overriding three small oceanic plates that lie to the west (Fig. 2). As the southermost of these, the Gorda plate, sinks beneath northern California it carries water bound into its surface deep into Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park 3 Figure 3. Schematic cross-section of a continental margin subduction zone showing the regions of mantle and crustal melting. Diagram from Chernicoff, Fox, and Venkatakrishnan (1997). Figure 2. Simplified tectonic map of the Pacific Northwest showing the Juan de Fuca ridge, Cascadia subduction zone, and High Cascade volcanoes. Base map after Guffanti and Weaver (1988); outcrop pattern of High Cascade volcanics from McBirney and White (1982). Figure 1. Two views of Lassen Peak’s eruption on 22-May-1915. (top) View of the tephra cloud rising from the summit; (bottom) view of the Devastated Area that was swept by pyroclastic and debris flows. Photos by B.F. Loomis. the mantle. Heat from the surrounding mantle warms the sinking plate and causes the waterbearing minerals it contains decompose. The water vapor they release rises into the “wedge” of hot peridotite above the plate and causes the rock there to partially melt (Fig. 3). The resulting basalt and basaltic andesite magmas are less dense than the surrounding peridotite and rise slowly until they either cool and solidify underground or reach the surface as lavas. The magmas that sustain eruptive activity at the Lassen Volcanic Center in the western part of the park are rising from a narrow zone where the top of the Gorda plate is about 100 km (60 mi) deep (Fig. 4). Some geologists believe this is the depth at which the mineral amphibole breaks down and triggers partial melting of the mantle (Stern, 1998). Others point out that many different minerals break down to release water from a subducting plate, and suggest that 100 km is simply the depth at which the mantle is hot enough to produce a separable amount of melt (Schmidt and Poli, 1998). Regional extension and volcanism In the eastern part of the park, on the other hand, the North American lithosphere is being pulled apart by Basin and Range extension. This extension began about 17 million years ago after the North American plate overrode a spreading center to the west and came into contact with the Pacific plate along the San Andreas fault (Atwater, 1970). Shearing along the fault has detached and rotated blocks of western North America and caused the crust to stretch and break along steep normal faults farther east. As the North American plate has been thinned by extension, the underlying asthenosphere has welled up and partially melted due to decompression. Basalt magmas produced by this partial melting have risen along the steep faults that cut across the eastern part of the park and erupted to build many small shield volcanoes and tephra cones. GEOLOGIC HISTORY Cascade Volcanism in the Lassen Peak Area The rise of magmas from the Cascadia subduction zone began to build the High Cascade volcanoes several million years ago. In the Lassen region at least five volcanic centers (Fig. 4) that each consisted of a central stratovolcano flanked by smaller domes have developed during the past 3.5 million years (Clynne, 1990a). The development of each volcanic center followed a similar pattern. First, silica-poor lavas called andesites and basaltic andesites erupted from a central vent and built up a cone of alternating lava flows and layers of pyroclastic materials. Next, thick lava flows of more silicarich andesite spilled down the sides of this early cone and completed its construction. Finally, silica-rich lavas called dacites and rhyolites erupted from vents around the flanks of the cone and formed domes and short, thick lava flows on its lower slopes. Beneath each volcanic center, however, the magma that fed the final phase of its activity continued to release a tremendous amount of heat as it cooled and crystallized (Fig. 5). 4 Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park Figure 4. Tectonic map of the Lassen Park region. Heavy blue lines are depth contours on the underlying Gorda Plate. Dashed black lines indicate the southern limits of Cascade volcanism 3 million years ago (3 Ma) and today (0 Ma). Large black letters indicate the locations of volcanic centers active in this region during the past 3.5 Ma: S = Snow Mountain; Lt = Latour; Ln = Lassen; C = Caribou; D = Dittmar; and M = Maidu. Green background indicates outcrops of old Sierra Nevada and Klamath basement rocks, whereas yellow indicates outcrops of young Cascade and Basin and Range volcanic rocks. Light gray lines are the traces of normal faults, and brown dots mark the locations of volcanic vents younger than 7 Ma. From Clynne et al. (2000). This heat warmed the groundwater below the central cone and formed a hydrothermal system beneath the old vent. The rising water carried S and Cl compounds that had been expelled from the magma, and oxidation of hydrogen sulfide to sulfate rendered the water acidic as it reached the surface. The reaction of this hot, acidic water with the fresh lavas of the cone produced soft clays and opal. Once the center of the cone had been “softened-up” by hydrothermal alteration it was preferentially removed by later stream and glacial erosion. This process left only segments of the unaltered flank lavas to mark the original extent of each cone. The Lassen Volcanic Center is the youngest of the five centers in the vicinity of the park (Fig. 6) and its history has followed the model outlined above fairly closely. It is also the only regional volcanic center in which the hydro- thermal system is still active. The growth of the stratovolcano that marked the center’s first two phases of activity (I and II on Fig. 7) began about 0.7 to 0.8 Ma, and ended about 0.61 Ma. The cone, called the Brokeoff Volcano (or Mount Tehama), is estimated to have been about 12 km in diameter and to have had a summit elevation of about 3,350 m (11,000 ft) by Clynne (1990b). Its vent appears to have been centered above the Sulfur Works geothermal area in the southwestern part of the park. Hydrothermal activity, which continues today at sites such as the Sulfur Works and Bumpass Hell, extensively altered the core of the old cone. Streams and Pleistocene glaciers have removed most of this altered rock, leaving only the relatively unaltered masses of flank lavas such as Brokeoff Mountain, Mount Diller and Mount Conard to outline its original extent. Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park 5 Figure 5. Schematic west-to-east cross-section through Lassen Volcanic National Park showing the vertically extensive magmatic system that has developed beneath the western part of the park (Lassen Volcanic Center) and the much smaller regional flux of mafic magmas that are rising beneath the eastern part of the park in response to Basin and Range extension. From Clynne et al. (2000). complexes that have been built during this pulse of activity (IIIL on Figure 7). A decrease in the strength of Earth’s gravitational field within a 25 km-wide oval area encompassing Lassen Peak and the Central Plateau to the east may reflect the presence of a body of low-density magma at depth. Clynne (1989) has argued that such a body would probably consist of partially molten dacitic magma, be 5 to 8 km across, and lie at a depth of 10 to 20 km Fig. 5). The presence of quenched basalt and andesite inclusions in recent eruptive products indicates that magmas from the mantle are still adding heat and mass to this dacitic magma chamber. Thusfar, however, efforts to image the body using seismic waves have been unsuccessful. Because rock is a poor conductor of heat it is likely that the cooling and crystallization of such a large mass of magma will sustain activity at the Lassen volcanic center for several hundred thousand more years. The third phase of activity at the Lassen volcanic center has continued sporadically during the past 600,000 years, with eruptions having occurred mostly in three pulses. The first pulse, which began about 614,000 years ago (Lanphere et al., 1999), formed a small caldera on the northern flank of the cone and produced rhyolite pyroclastic deposits (the Rockland Tephra) as well as several domes and flows (IIIR in Fig. 7). Little trace of this caldera remains because younger third-phase lavas have apparently filled it. The second pulse of activity occurred between 250,000 and 200,000 years ago and built a series of dacite domes and lava flows on the northern flank of the old cone. Bumpass Mountain, Ski Heil Peak and Reading Peak are some of the domes that grew during this episode (IIIB on Fig. 7). The third pulse of activity has occurred during the past 100,000 years and has produced a distinctive suite of dacite lavas that contain quenched inclusions of more mafic (andesite and basalt) magmas (Fig. 8). Eagle Peak (57,000 years old), Lassen Peak (27,000 years old; Fig. 9) and the Chaos Crags (about 1,100 years old) are three of the more prominent domes or dome Origin of the Lavas in the Lassen Region Magmas entering the crust from the underlying subduction zone are basalts and basaltic andesites, and have continued to erupt around the margins of the center throughout its history (Clynne and Muffler, 1989). The Hat Creek Basalt (Fig. 10), which forms the Subway Cave lava tube has formed just north of the park, is typical of this suite of magmas. The initial compositional variability of these magmas is probably due to differences in the degrees of partial melting or water contents of their mantle source regions, as at nearby Mount Shasta (Baker and others, 1994). Early in history of the Lassen volcanic center these magmas ascended through relatively “cool” crust and underwent relatively little interaction with it. As the cone-building phase progressed, however, rising magmas warmed the crust and lowered its density and viscosity. These changes slowed the ascent of later batches of magma and led to the development of small magma reservoirs in the crust. Within these reservoirs the compositions of the rising magmas were modified by assimilation of the surrounding crustal rocks and by the fractionation of earlycrystallized minerals. These processes led to the 6 Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park 7 Figure 7. Simplified geologic map of Lassen Volcanic National Park and vicinity. From Clynne et al. (2000). to rhyodacites with about 73 percent (Clynne et al., 2000). Figure 5. Simplified geologic map of the Lassen region showing the outcrop patterns of volcanic rocks produced by five of the volcanic centers that have developed in this part of the High Cascades during the past 3.5 m.y. From Clynne et al. (2000). Note the park boundary shown in red. development of the progressively more silicarich andesites and dacites that have dominated the second and third eruptive phases. The present chamber is envisioned as a body that is vertically stratified from a dacitic cap, through an andesitic dominant volume, to a basaltic base (Fig. 5). Basaltic magmas cannot rise directly through the chamber because of the lower densities of the magmas that overlie them. They do occasionally intrude into the dacite, however, and mix or mingle with it to form the distinctive mafic inclusions characteristic of the lavas that have been erupted from the center during the past 100,000 years (Fig. 8). PETROLOGY OF THE LASSEN PARK REGION Geologists classify volcanic rocks primarily according to the amounts of silica (SiO2) they contain (Fig. 11) for two reasons. First, silicon and oxygen are the most abundant elements in Earth’s crust and mantle and make up the majority of all common volcanic rocks. Second, silica content determines what type of eruption a lava will tend to produce. Silica-rich lavas (dacites and rhyodacites) are “pasty” and tend to trap and “hold in” dissolved volatiles more effectively than runny, silica-poor ones (basalts and basaltic andesites). The expansion of dissolved volatiles is what drives explosive eruptions, so volatile-rich silicic magmas tend to erupt more violently than their silica-poor counterparts. Volcanic rocks from Lassen Volcanic National Park span a wide range of silica contents, from basalts with <50 weight percent SiO2 GEOLOGIC HAZARDS AT LASSEN PARK During its recent history the Lassen Volcanic Center has typically produced dacitic and rhyolitic lavas. Because of their high silica contents these lavas are very viscous and may retain volatiles such as water, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide until high vapor pressures are reached. When the magmas approach Earth’s surface these volatiles form rapidly expanding bubbles that tear the lava apart in explosive eruptions. Such eruptions are expected to produce towering ash clouds that will spread airfall tephra tens of kilometers downwind from the volcano (Fig. 1a). These clouds may also “collapse” to form ground-hugging pyroclastic flows that will devastate lowland areas over similar distances. Smaller pyroclastic flows are also likely to be formed when the steep sides of silicic domes or lava flows collapse (Hoblitt and others, 1987). If an eruption were to occur in the winter or spring, hot tephra or pyroclastic material could melt the thick snow pack that covers the area and produce floods and volcanic debris flows (lahars) that would devastate river valleys well downstream from the volcano. Finally, the presence of a relatively shallow dacitic magma chamber and the formation of at least one caldera during the past several hundred thousand years suggest that another caldera-forming eruption is a distinct possibility (Christiansen, 1982). REFERENCES CITED Atwater, T., 1970, Implications of plate tectonics for the Cenozoic tectonic evolution of western North America: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 81, p. 3513-3536. Bacon, C.R., 1983, Eruptive history of Mount Mazama and Crater Lake Caldera, Cascade Range, U.S.A.: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 18, p. 57-115. Bacon, C.R., 1989, Mount Mazama and Crater Lake caldera, Oregon, in Muffler, L.J.P., Bacon, C.R., Christiansen, R.L., Clynne, M.L., 8 Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park Figure 8. Fragment of the dacite lava from Lassen Peak’s 1915 eruption showing an mingled glob of andesite magma (bottom). Donnelly-Nolan, J.M., Miller, C.D., Sherrod, D.R., and Smith, J.G., Excursion 12B: South Cascades arc volcanism, California and southern Oregon, in Chapin, C.E., and Zidek, J., eds., Field excursions to volcanic terranes in the western United States, Volume II: Cascades and Intermountain West: New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources Memoir 47, p. 203-211. Bacon, C.R., Bruggman, P.E., Christiansen, R.L., Clynne, M.A., Donnelly-Nolan, J.M., and Hildreth, W., 1997b, Primitive magmas at five Cascade volcanic fields: Melts from hot, heterogeneous sub-arc mantle: Canadian Mineralogist, v. 35, p. 397-423. Bacon, C.R., and Druitt, T.H., 1988, Compositional evolution of the zoned calcalkaline magma chamber of Mount Mazama, Crater Lake, Oregon: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, v. 98, p. 224-256. Bacon, C.R., Gunn, S.H., Lanphere, M.A., and Wooden, J.L., 1994, Multiple isotopic components in Quaternary volcanic rocks of the Cascade Arc near Crater Lake, Oregon: Journal of Petrology, v. 35, no. 6, p. 1521-1556. Bacon, C.R., and Lanphere, M.A., 2006, Eruptive history and geochronology of Mount Mazama and the Crater Lake region, Oregon: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 118, no. 11/12, p. 1331-1359. Bacon, C.R., Mastlin, L.G., Scott, K.M., and Na- Figure 9. Lassen Peak (viewed from the south across Lake Helen) is actually a large dacite dome that grew about 27,000 years ago on the northern flank of the Brokeoff Volcano. thenson, M., 1997, Volcano and earthquake hazards in the Crater Lake region, Oregon: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 97487, 32 p. Chernicoff, S., and Venkatakrishnan, R., 1995, Geology: New York, Worth Publishers, 593 p. Chernicoff, S., and Whitney, D., 2002, Geology, 3rd ed.: Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, Pearson-Prentice Hall, 679 p. Druitt, T.H., and Bacon, C.R., 1989, Petrology of the zoned calcalkaline magma chamber of Mount Mazama, Crater Lake, Oregon: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, v. 101, p. 245-259. Hoblitt, R.P., Miller, C.D., and Scott, W.E., 1987, Volcanic hazards with regard to siting nuclear-power plants in the Pacific Northwest: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 87-297, xx p. Lisowski, M., Dzurisin, D., and Roeloffs, E., 2000, Cascades volcano PBO instrument clusters: Menlo Park, U.S. Geological Survey proposal summary (http://www.scec.org/ news/00news/images/pbominiproposals/ Lisowskipbo13.pdf). Nelson, C.H., Bacon, C.R., Robinson, S.W., Adam, D.P., Bradbury, J.P., Barber, J.H., Jr., Schwartz, D., and Vagenas, G., 1994, The volcanic, sedimentologic, and paleolimnologic history of the Crater Lake caldera floor, Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park 9 Figure 11. Classification of igneous rocks according to their silica contents. The minerals typically found as coarser crystals (phenocrysts) in each rock type are shown by the gray bars. Figure 10. Hat Creek Basalt collected from a road cut just north of the park. The abundant vesicles in this sample suggest it was volatile rich at the time of eruption. Oregon: Evidence for small caldera evolution: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 106, p. 684-704. Williams, H., 1942, The Geology of Crater Lake National Park, Oregon: Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication, no. 540, 162 p. GLOSSARY Andesite: Volcanic rock with an intermediate silica content (about 57 to 63 wt. %) that typically has a fine gray groundmass and contains coarser crystals of plagioclase, augite, and hypersthene. Asthenosphere: Layer of Earth’s upper mantle that lies between depths of about 100 and 350 km and is relatively “soft” or weak because of the presence of a small amount of melt along mineral grain boundaries within the peridotite. Basalt: Volcanic rock with a low silica content (about 47 to 52 wt. %) that typically has a fine black groundmass and contains coarser crystals of olivine, plagioclase, and augite. Basaltic andesite: Volcanic rock with a low silica content (52 to 57 wt. %) that typically has a fine black groundmass and contains crystals of olivine, hypersthene, augite, and plagioclase. Caldera: Circular or elliptical depression formed when the block of crust that overlies a shallow magma reservoir subsides after the reservoir has been partially emptied by an eruption. Cumulates: Igneous rocks formed by the accumulation of early-formed crystals in a magma. Cumulates are formed by settling of dense crystals to the bottom of a magma reservoir and by explusion of melt from a crystal “mush” undergoing gravitational compaction. Dacite: Volcanic rock with a high silica content (about 63 to 68 wt. %) that typically has a fine gray groundmass and contains coarser crystals of plagioclase, hornblende, and hypersthene, and quartz. Debris flow: Dense suspension of rock fragments in water that moves down slope under the influence of gravity. The density of these flows enables them to easily carry large blocks of rock at speeds up to 50 kph. Dike: A sheet-like body of igneous rock that cuts across older rock bodies and is formed from magma that solidified within a fracture. Dome: Volcano formed where a batch of viscous magma (typically dacite or rhyolite) rises to the surface and piles up in a mound on top of the vent. Domes are typically 1 to 5 km in diameter. Hydrothermal: Literally, “hot water”. Hydrothermal systems in volcanic areas are typically fed by rain or snow melt that percolates down into the Earth, is heated by hot rock 10 Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park or magma at a shallow depth, and rises back to the surface. Lithospheric plate: Slab of Earth’s outer surface that consists of the crust (continental or oceanic) and the cool, rigid upper mantle that underlies it. Plates are typically 100 to 150 km thick and move about relative to one another on a warmer, softer layer of the mantle beneath them. Magma: Partially-molten rock; typically a mixture of melt, mineral crystals, and gas bubbles. Peridotite: Coarse-grained igneous rock that forms Earth’s mantle and consists mostly of peridotite, augite, and hypersthene. Pyroclastic flow: Hot, dense suspension of lava fragments, volcanic gases, and entrained air that may travel at speeds of up to 100 kph down the slopes of a volcano. Pleistocene: Interval of time between 1.8 Ma and approximately 10 ka during which landmasses at high elevations and latitudes were subjected repeated glacial advances and retreats (the “Ice Ages”). Rhyodacite: Volcanic rock with a high silica content (68 to 72 wt. %) that typically has a fine, light gray to pink groundmass and contains coarser crystals of plagioclase, quartz, and biotite. Seiche: A wave formed in an enclosed or semienclosed body of water that has a period which depends on the dimensions of the basin holding the water. Shield volcano: Volcano with low slopes that is composed of hundreds of thin flows of low viscosity basaltic or basaltic andesite lava erupted from a central vent or fissure. The shield volcanoes in the southern Cascades typically have diameters of 5 to 15 km. Stratovolcano: Volcanic cone, typically on the order of 20 to 30 km in diameter, that is composed of alternating layers of lava and pyroclastic debris. Subduction: Process in which a plate of oceanic lithosphere is overridden by another plate at a convergent boundary and sinks into the mantle. Tephra: Pyroclastic (“fire broken”) material of a wide range of sizes—from fine dust to large Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park miles to the Bumpass Hell trail parking lot. 3.3 blocks— that is ejected explosively from a volcano and flies through the air before falling to Earth. Volatiles: Chemical elements and compounds, such as H2O, CO2, Cl and SO2, that occur as gases at relatively low temperatures. FIELD TRIP ROAD LOG We will plan to visit five stops today as well as allow some time for a visit to the Park Service’s interpretive displays at the visitors center near the south entrance. Please wear hiking boots and bring a lunch, water, a hat, and sunscreen. Site descriptions in this log are mostly modified from those of Clynne et al. (2000). Mileage: 102.4 Junction of U.S. Highway 44 and road into Lassen Volcanic National Park. 0.6 103.0 Boundary of Lassen Volcanic National Park. Remember, collecting or disturbing rocks or other natural features in the park is prohibited. As we drive eastward towards the Loomis museum (103.6) we’ll pass Manzanita Lake which was impounded by by the Chaos Jumbles rockfall deposit only a few hundred years ago. 27.6 131.2 STOP 1: Visitors center. From our vantage point at the park’s visitor center note the stratified lavas and pyroclastics in Brokeoff Mountain (Fig. 12) that preserves a remnant of the flank of the Brokeoff Volcano. Proceed north on the main road. At about 0.5 miles we pass the Sulfur Works, a small thermal area with fumaroles and boiling springs that is thought to mark the approximate location of the vent of the Brokeoff Volcano. Proceed 1.4 miles further north on the road to a turnout on right-hand side. 2.3 133.5 STOP 2: Diamond Peak overlook. Diamond Peak is a relatively unaltered sequence of andesitic lava flows and pyroclastic rocks that were deposited just east of the vent of the Brokeoff Volcano. The panoramic view to the south (Fig. 13) shows nearly the entire stratigraphy of the volcano as well as its contact with the 11 Figure 12. Brokeoff Mountain, here viewed from the north, is an erosional remnant of the silicic andesites erupted during stage two of the growth of the Brokeoff Volcano. underlying rocks of the deeply eroded Maidu Volcanic Center. Volcanic bedding can be correlated from one side of the cone to the other, and shows no evidence of offset along a caldera-forming fault. The wall of Little Hot Springs Valley to the east (Fig. 14) also exposes thinlybedded stage-one lavas (brown) and altered pyroclastics (yellow), and is capped by a thicker stage-two flow. Proceed 3.1 miles north to the south end of Emerald Lake where the road crosses the contact between the uppermost lavas of the Brokeoff Volcano (dark andesite) and the lighter gray, stage-three dacite of Ski Heil Peak. Continue 0.4 137.0 STOP 3: Bumpass Hell geothermal area. The first part of the 4 km trail to Bumpass Hell passes through the stage-three dacite of the Bumpass Mountain dome. Note the well-developed glacial striations and polish on the surface of the dome near the beginning of the trail (Fig. 15). At the viewpoint 0.85 km from the parking lot, the trail crosses a contact between the Bumpass Mountain dacite and an underlying stage-two andesite. Continue down the slope to the east to the Bumpass Hell thermal area (Fig. 16). For your safety, be sure to stay on the established trails and boardwalks while exploring the thermal area. Temperatures in the vapordominated part of the geothermal reservoir that underlies Bumpass Hell are 235˚C, and the water discharged by the springs and fumaroles is rich in sulfates and quite acidic (Clynne and Muffler, 1989). Intense alteration of the host rocks is apparent in the development of the clay minerals seen in the boiling mudpots and the white outcrops just south of the boardwalk entrance. As the thermal waters reach the surface and cool, they deposit pyrite (iron sulfide) as a black “mud” in the streams that drain from several of the thermal pools. Figure 13. Panorama looking south from the Diamond Peak overlook. From Clynne et al. (2000). 12 Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park Figure 14. Altered stage I lavas from the Brokeoff Volcano exposed in the northern wall of Little Hot Springs Creek Canyon. Return to the parking lot and continue north on the road past Helen Lake, Lassen Peak and the Reading Peak domes. 7.7 144.7 STOP 4: Overview to the East. From the crest of the road you can look to the east across the Central Plateau, a region covered by young hybrid andesite lavas that have erupted during the past 0.30Ma, to the Prospect Peak and Mount Harkness basaltic shield volcanoes in the distance. Turn into the Devastated Area parking lot. 5.3 150.0 STOP 5: Devastated Area. The “Devastated Area” is a swath of land that was swept by repeated debris avalanches, mudflows, and pyroclastic flows during Lassen Peak’s 1915 eruptions (Fig. 1b). Beginning on the peak’s northeastern slope, this area extends across parking and at least a kilometer into the forest beyond. In mid-May of 1915 a small dome of glassy dacite rose into a summit crater that had been opened by earlier steam explosions. This dome was blown apart by an explosion on the night of May 19-20th, and its hot fragments melted snow on the peak and produced a large debris flow that travelled 15 km down the canyon of Lost Creek. Some of the dome fragments cooled and fractured after they had come to rest, creating the distinctive “prismatically-jointed blocks” seen near the parking lot. (Notice the abundant inclusions of andesitic lava in these dacite blocks.) A small tongue of dacite lava welled up out of the vent after the destruction Hirt – Lassen Volcanic National Park Figure 15. Glacially polished and striated outcrop of the Bumpass Hell dacite near the start of the Bumpass Hell trail. of the dome and flowed several hundred meters down the western and northeastern sides of the summit. On May 22nd, a great eruption cloud rose from the summit and collapsed, sending a pyroclastic flow and a second debris flow down Lost Creek. Airfall tephra from this cloud was reported to have fallen as far east as Elko, Nevada. Harris (1988) gives a detailed account of Lassen Peak’s entire 20th century eruptive episode. As you return to the park road and continue north, note Raker Peak on the right. It is an early stage-three rhyolite dome that is similar in composition to the Rockland Tephra. Its steep southeastern face may mark part of the margin of the 0.61 Ma caldera, but has been eroded by subsequent glaciation (Clynne and Muffler, 1989). Continue north and west on the road into the Chaos Jumbles and pull into the turnout on the right. 8.0 158.0 STOP 5: Chaos Crags and Chaos Jumbles. The Chaos Crags are a suite of five dacite domes that were emplaced over a period of about 100 years, beginning 1,100 years ago (Clynne and Muffler, 1989). The growth of these domes was preceded by explosive eruptions that produced an air-fall tephra and several pyroclastic flows. During the emplacement process, the outer parts of several of the hot domes collapsed and produced additional pyroclastic flows. 300 to 400 years ago the cold outer part of dome number 2 collapsed (Fig. 17) in a series 13 Figure 17. Chaos Jumbles rock avalanche deposit in the foreground and the partially-collapsed face of Chaos Crags dome 2 in the background. of three rockfall avalanches that travelled up to 4.5 km and formed the Chaos Jumbles on which we are now standing (Fig. 18). Note that most of the dacite blocks in the Jumbles are extensively oxidized (reddened). This oxidation probably occurred while the hot lava was exposed to the air on the surface of the young dome. Figure 16. Boiling pools and fumaroles at the Bumpass Hell geothermal area. Acidic vapors have bleached the dacite in the background white, and the deposition of tiny pyrite crystals colors vents in the foreground black. Continue west on the highway to the park headquarters at Manzanita Lake, where we’ll stop briefly at the Loomis Museum (158.9). Our field trip will end at the museum. Log ends. Last updated 16-Aug-2011. Figure 18. Geologic map of the Chaos Jumbles showing its source in the Chaos Crage, the extent of the deposit and how it has dammed Manzanita Lake. Map by H. Williams.